Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
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Abstract
The foreign policy principles proclaimed by the Member States of the European Community
in European Political Cooperation were founded upon the ideas which underpinned European
integration: the abandonment of Westphalian norms and respect for human rights,
democracy and the rule of law. From the Copenhagen Declaration in 1970 to the Treaty on
European Union in 1992, the Member States developed certain means to promote these
values, such as the submission of joint dmarches and the adoption of common positions in
international organizations. But the political constraints of the Cold War in general
prevented the Member States from implementing vigorously the values which they endorsed.
The end of the Cold War, the references to human rights and democracy in the TEU and the
establishment of a Common Foreign and Security Policy with improved instruments for
foreign policy cooperation raised hopes that human rights might come to play a more
prominent role in European foreign policy. However, economic competition and conflicting
national interests continue to restrict Europes common foreign policy on human rights
issues to declarations of concern rather than action.
When the Member States of the European Community decided in September 1970
to coordinate their foreign policies through European Political Cooperation (EPC),
they faced the problem that the social and political conditions shaping foreign policy
in each Member State were extremely diverse. In the absence of a clearly homogenous
European identity which could form the basis for a common foreign policy, the
Member States sought to identify certain common values, drawn from the process of
European integration, which could serve as the basis for foreign policy coordination.
The 1973 Copenhagen Declaration on the European Identity, in which the Member
States first sought to define their position and responsibilities in foreign affairs, noted
that the Member States were determined to defend the principles of representative
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EJIL (1999), Vol. 10 No. 2, 313337
314
democracy, of the rule of law, of social justice and of respect for human rights.1 In the
following years, EPC issued innumerable reports and declarations in which the
Member States reiterated the principles which guided European foreign policy:
adherence to the principles of the United Nations Charter and respect for international
law; a commitment to democracy and human rights; the use of diplomacy rather than
coercion in international relations; the need for international cooperation to promote
economic and social progress; and the need for indigenous peoples to determine their
own fate.2
The Member States thus placed the principles which underpinned their communal
relations at the heart of their relations with the rest of the world. The modern state
system, based on sovereign equality and non-interference in domestic affairs, has
often been seen as a guarantor of order in international relations as it enables
coexistence between states with different values, while foreign policy which seeks to
promote human rights has been stigmatized as dangerously idealistic and naive.3 The
Treaty of Rome, however, had transformed the nature of statehood in Western
Europe. The founding Member States of the European Community had agreed to
establish a post-modern state system, whereby they ceded part of their sovereign
powers to international institutions and replaced the traditional distinction between
domestic and foreign affairs with a system of mutual interference in each others
internal affairs in the belief that their future security and prosperity could best be
ensured by transparency, openness and interdependence.4 This system was underpinned by respect for human rights, ensured not only through the developing
jurisprudence of the European Court of Justice but also through adherence to the
European Convention on Human Rights, democracy, which was a prerequisite for
membership of the Community, and the rule of law, ensured through the independence and legal supremacy of the European Court of Justice.
Until the end of the Cold War, however, the European Community remained a
post-modern island in a predominantly modern world. The developing countries have
often been suspicious of the concept of human rights precisely because of their
European nature. For the developing countries, sovereignty represented a powerful
instrument for shaping their national identities and the principal normative and
ideological defence against foreign domination. They were generally hostile to any
actions, including the promotion of human rights, which could be seen as interference
in their domestic affairs. Moreover, countries which had achieved self-determination
only after many years of colonial subjugation saw considerable irony in their former
1
2
315
imperial masters seeking to base foreign policy on human rights.5 The Member States
decision to place human rights at the centre of the emerging European foreign policy
guaranteed that they would be drawn into conflict with the developing states if they
attempted to match their words with actions.
Despite the rhetoric of a common attachment to human rights in foreign policy, the
weight that different Member States placed on human rights in their bilateral foreign
policies has varied significantly. A states commitment to pursuing human rights
issues in its foreign policy depends both on its size and on its domestic political values.
The frequency and intensity of the conflict between self-interest and promoting
human rights is often proportional to a states power. As small states have fewer and
less complicated foreign policy objectives than large states, their human rights
initiatives are less likely to clash with their political, strategic or economic interests
abroad. On the other hand, large states have complex worldwide interests which will
often conflict with an assertive human rights policy.6 Moreover, the so-called
like-minded states, Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden,7 share a social
democratic tradition, a strong attachment to human rights in their own societies and
a commitment to a comprehensive welfare state. These political traditions are
reflected in foreign policy; the like-minded states provide far more generous overseas
development aid than the other Member States8 and have generally spoken out
vigorously on human rights issues abroad.9 For the like-minded states, EPC
represented an opportunity to vastly increase their leverage on human rights issues, a
goal not always shared by other Member States with different domestic political
traditions.10 Historical ties, moreover, led certain Member States to nurse particular
preoccupations not shared by the other Member States. Portugal, for example, has
been far more concerned to censure Indonesian conduct in East Timor than the other
Member States, while Greece has tried to focus attention on human rights abuses in
Turkey.
Identifying human rights as a central component of both EPC and the Common
Foreign and Security Policy made manifest the paradox that a common European
foreign policy has to be formulated and applied in abstraction from the social and
7
8
9
10
E.g., in June 1994, Anwar Ibrahim, the Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister, complained: To allow
ourselves to be lectured and hectored on freedom and human rights after one hundred years of struggle to
regain our liberty and human dignity, by those who participated in or benefited from our subjugation, is
willingly to suffer impudence. Far Eastern Economic Review The Pacific Century, 2 June 1994, at 20.
See J. Egeland, Impotent Superpower Potent Small State: Potentials and Limitations of Human Rights
Objectives in the Foreign Policies of the United States and Norway (1988).
Norway is also included in this group.
In 19751976, Denmark gave 0.53% of its GNP as overseas development assistance, the Netherlands
0.77% and Sweden 0.78%, compared to France 0.42%, Germany 0.38%, Italy 0.11% and the United
Kingdom 0.39%. In 19951996, Denmark gave 1%, the Netherlands 0.81% and Sweden 0.80%,
compared to France 0.52%, Germany 0.32%, Italy 0.18% and the United Kingdom 0.28%. Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development, 1997 Report of the DAC, Table 9, at A16.
See D. Gillies, Between Principle and Practice: Human Rights in North-South Relations (1996), at 201222.
Pijpers, The Netherlands: How to Keep the Spirit of Fouchet in the Bottle, in C. Hill (ed.), National Foreign
Policies and European Political Co-operation (1983) 166, at 177.
316
11
12
13
14
15
16
Koskenniemi, International Law Aspects of the Common Foreign and Security Policy, in M.
Koskenniemi (ed.), International Law Aspects of the European Union (1998) 27, at 43.
Bulletin 7/8/1986, para. 2.4.4.
Memorandum on action taken in the field of Human Rights, para. 2. 25 May 1987. 3/1 EPC
Documentation Bulletin (1987) 187.
Memorandum on EPC and Human Rights 7 May 1986. 2/1 EPC Documentation Bulletin (1986) 137.
Ibid, at para. 12.
Ibid, at para. 7.
317
As with public statements, the number of dmarches rose gradually. There were 50
in 1988,24 70 in 1989,25 about 100 in 1990,26 75 in 1991,27 over 100 in 199228 and
over 70 in 1993.29 While a few dmarches were made public, most remained
confidential. The European Parliament has repeatedly called for greater openness
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
Rapport annuel sur les actions des Douze dans le domaine des droits de lhomme, introduction. 8 May
1989. 5/1 EPC Documentation Bulletin (1989) 141.
Ibid, at para. 1.
Memorandum on the activities of the Twelve in the field of human rights, para. 10. 15 May 1990. 6 EPC
Documentation Bulletin (1990) 190.
Annual Memorandum on the activities of the Twelve in the field of human rights, para. 12. 15 May
1991. 7 EPC Documentation Bulletin (1991) 132.
Annual Memorandum to the European Parliament on the activities of the European Community and its
Member States in the field of human rights, para. 17. 8 May 1992. 8 EPC Documentation Bulletin (1992)
166.
Annual Memorandum to the European Parliament on the activities of the Community and its Member
States in the field of human rights, para. 15. 11 June 1993. 9 EPC Documentation Bulletin (1993) 237.
P. de Schoutheete, La cooperation politique europeenne (1986), at 141.
Memorandum, supra note 17, at para. 1.
Memorandum, supra note 19, at para. 10.
Memorandum, supra note 20, at para. 12.
Memorandum, supra note 21, at para. 17.
European Commission, XXVIth General Report on the Activities of the European Communities, at para. 1080.
European Commission, XXVIIth General Report on the Activities of the European Communities, at para. 990.
318
when submitting dmarches, as, in its view, it is only public condemnation and
concerted international criticism which will bring the necessary degree of pressure to
bear on oppressive governments. Moreover, while dmarches remained secret, it was
impossible for Parliament to judge how vigorously EPC had pursued particular issues.
EPC responded that public statements were employed to heighten public awareness of
particular situations or when EPC believed that publicity would bring useful pressure
to bear on a government, while confidential dmarches were used whenever publicity
might endanger the victims of violations or provoke a hostile reaction from the
government concerned.30
EPCs claims are hard to assess as, by definition, the successes and failures of quiet
diplomacy are unknown and unknowable. The well-known case of the Jackson
Vanik Amendment illustrates that legislative insistence on the replacement of quiet
diplomacy with overt pressure can lead to a significant setback for human rights.31
However, at the heart of Parliaments criticism of quiet diplomacy lay distrust of the
Member States commitment to human rights, which would have been dispelled had it
been clear from the Member States activity in other areas of foreign policy that they
were determined to pursue human rights diplomacy with vigour.
B International Organizations
From the start of the EPC process, achieving a common position at the forthcoming
Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) was seen by the Member
States as essential, for a united front would not only help to promote the emerging
sense of European identity in foreign affairs but would also increase the Member
States influence in the negotiations.32 With the United States showing little interest in
the negotiations, the Nine emerged as the most coherent and influential actor; their
intensive preparation and their tabling of a series of proposals had largely determined
the Conferences agenda by the time it opened in July 1973.33 However, the deliberate
30
31
32
33
319
vagueness of the Helsinki Final Act ensured, as the Presidency later acknowledged,34
that the real test of the Nines commitment to human rights would be the
implementation of the human rights provisions. At the 1977 Belgrade conference, the
Nine presented a number of proposals, such as the recognition of a right for
individuals to monitor the performance of their governments, designed to strengthen
implementation of the human rights aspects of the Final Act, but the intransigence of
the Eastern bloc ensured that all of these proposals were rejected. At the 1980 Madrid
meeting, EPC demanded an end to human rights violations in Eastern Europe too
numerous and serious to pass unobserved and drew particular attention to the
imposition of martial law in Poland, which the Member States complained put the
entire future of the CSCE at risk.35
Despite EPCs hope that the 1985 Ottawa conference on human rights would lead
to concrete developments in respect for and promotion of human rights and
fundamental freedoms,36 Eastern bloc obstruction again prevented any meeting of
minds and no concluding document could be agreed. At the 1986 Vienna CSCE
meeting, the Member States campaigned for the creation of a standing committee to
monitor the application of the human rights provisions of the Helsinki Final Act and
the establishment of a mechanism for the examination of individual complaints;37 this
initiative led to the implementation of the Human Dimension Mechanism. As EPC
noted, It can be said with confidence that one of the major causes contributing to the
success of the Vienna Meeting was the determination of the Twelve to advance and
explain their own political values concerning the rights of individual citizens.38 The
Twelve subsequently made active use of the Human Dimension Mechanism to
intervene in Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Romania and the Soviet Union
during 1989.39 When faced with refusal to operate the Human Dimension Mechanism, the Twelve were able to exert economic pressure through the Community. In
March 1989, the Presidency submitted a dmarche expressing concern at the
treatment of Romanian citizens who had protested at the systematic destruction of
34
35
36
37
38
39
It was clear from the beginning that success in attempting to give firm substance to that act of
rapprochement between our countries and peoples would depend less on the content of the Final Act
than on how it was implemented by each of the thirty-five signatory states both in respect of their own
citizens and in their relations with each other. Speech by Gaston Thorn on behalf of the Nine at the
opening of the Madrid conference. Bulletin 11/1980, at para. 1.1.4.
However, EPCs position was undermined by the Greek governments refusal to accept that the Soviet
Union was responsible for the Polish situation and its insistence on entering reservations to the
Presidencys statements on Poland. Agence Europe, no. 3305, 8/9 February 1982, at 3.
Bulletin 4/1985, at para. 2.4.1.
Bulletin 5/1987, at para. 2.2.46; Memorandum, supra note 13, at para. 5.
Memorandum, supra note 13, at para. 3.
Memorandum, supra note 19, at para. 16. Individual Member States continued to make interventions
concerning the violations of the rights of certain individuals (such as the intervention by the United
Kingdom in 1989 in respect of the Soviet mathematician George Samoilovich who had been refused an
exit visa), while collective interventions were reserved for large scale, systematic violations. Coomans
and Lijnzaad, Initiating the CSCE Supervisory Procedure, in A. Bloed and P. van Dijk (eds), The Human
Dimension of the Helsinki Process (1991) 109, at 121.
320
villages; when Romania rejected the dmarche on the ground that it constituted an
interference in internal affairs, the Council announced the suspension of negotiations
between the Community and Romania for a trade and economic cooperation
agreement.40
Although the Member States had little difficulty in achieving consensus on human
rights issues within the CSCE, they experienced far greater problems at the United
Nations, where they were forced to adopt positions almost daily on a much broader
range of issues. In an effort to establish the Member States as a credible bloc, a United
Nations Working Group was formed to coordinate national positions. The 1986
Dutch Presidency noted that the Presidencys speech to the Plenary Session of the
General Assembly on behalf of the Member States had addressed human rights issues,
while in the Third Committee, the principal General Assembly forum for human rights
questions, the Member States were issuing an average of three joint declarations and
explanations of vote each session.41 In 1986, the Presidency delivered a statement to
the Third Committee setting out the overall approach of the Twelve to human rights,
and in plenary spoke for the Twelve on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the
adoption of the UN Covenants on human rights.42 Until 1989, coordination of
national positions in the UN Commission on Human Rights was poor as not all
Member States were members of the Commission and there was already an
established procedure of coordination within the Western European and Others
Group (WEOG). In 1989, however, as a result of a recommendation from the Human
Rights Working Group, the Spanish Presidency delivered a speech on behalf of the
Twelve for the first time.43
During the early 1990s, cohesion improved still further. In 1991, for example, the
Member States made nine common statements in the Third Committee, eight
common explanations of vote and co-sponsored nine resolutions, four more than the
year before.44 At the 48th session of the Commission, the Member States co-sponsored
12 resolutions, compared to only six the year before. By 1992, cooperation between
the Member States had become sufficiently routine for EPC to claim that at the United
Nations the Member States were seen as the only group to adopt common positions
throughout the session [which] had a great influence on the course of events.45
However, although EPC was able to establish a procedure for consultation and
coordination between the Member States, it was unable to overcome fundamental
differences between the Member States on certain issues. In the Third Committee, the
40
41
42
43
44
45
321
Member States split their votes on seven resolutions in 1987,46 on six resolutions in
1988,47 on two resolutions in 1989,48 on four resolutions in 1990,49 on three
resolutions in 1991,50 on three resolutions in 199251 and on two resolutions in
1993.52 In the Commission on Human Rights, the Member States split their votes on
nine resolutions in 1987,53 on nine resolutions in 1988,54 on seven resolutions in
1989,55 on eight resolutions in 1990,56 on two in 1991,57 on two in 199258 and on
two in 1993.59 The sharp reduction in split votes after 1990 was due not to increased
willingness to cooperate among the Member States but to political developments in
South Africa, which had always represented a particular bone of contention for the
Twelve and usually accounted for the majority of split votes. With the release of
Nelson Mandela in February 1990 and the new willingness of the apartheid regime to
adopt reforms, not only did the Member States find it easier to agree on their position
but South Africa gradually came to feature less frequently on the UN agenda.
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
Resolutions 42/50 (social progress), 42/95 (self-determination), 42/96 (mercenaries), 42/99 (human
rights and scientific developments), 42/134 (the family), 42/140 (migrant workers) and 42/145
(improvement of social life). 19 votes were taken and 100 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 43/92 (South Africa), 43/106 (self-determination), 43/107 (mercenaries), 43/126
(approaches within the UN to improve the enjoyment of human rights), 43/146 (migrant workers) and
43/156 (improvement of social life). 13 votes were taken and 68 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 44/79 (self-determination) and 44/81 (mercenaries). 10 votes were taken and 116
resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 45/84 (South Africa), 45/87 (world social situation), 45/130 (self-determination) and
45/132 (mercenaries). 10 votes were taken and 96 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 46/87 (self-determination), 46/89 (mercenaries) and 46/95 (world social situation). 10
votes were taken and 70 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 47/82 (self-determination), 47/84 (mercenaries) and 47/138 (elections). 11 votes were
taken and 70 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 48/92 (mercenaries) and 48/94 (self-determination). 11 votes were taken and 74
resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1987/2 (Palestine), 1987/4 (Palestine), 1987/7 (Southern Africa), 1987/8 (Namibia),
1987/9 (Southern Africa), 1987/10 (South Africa), 1987/14 (South Africa), 1987/44 (youth) and
1987/49 (Palestinian refugee camps). 28 votes were taken and 61 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1988/3 (Palestine), 1988/5 (Western Sahara), 1988/8 (Southern Africa), 1988/9 (South
Africa), 1988/10 (Namibia), 1988/12 (South Africa), 1988/13 (South Africa), 1988/22 (realization of
economic and social rights) and 1988/60 (human rights and technological development). 23 votes were
taken and 78 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1989/2 (Palestine), 1989/5 (South Africa), 1989/6 (South Africa), 1989/7 (Southern
Africa), 1989/12 (realization of economic and social rights), 1989/15 (foreign debt), 1989/18 (Western
Sahara) and 1989/22 (Southern Africa). 19 votes were taken and 75 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1990/8 (Southern Africa), 1990/9 (Cambodia), 1990/10 (Panama), 1990/12 (Convention
on the suppression and punishment of apartheid), 1990/22 (Southern Africa), 1990/23 (South Africa),
1990/24 (economic adjustment policies) and 1990/26 (South Africa). 19 votes were taken and 81
resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1991/15 (right to development) and 1991/13 (economic adjustment policies). 16 votes
were taken and 82 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1992/9 (economic adjustment policies) and 1992/13 (right to development). 16 votes were
taken and 83 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1993/12 (economic adjustment policies) and 1993/22 (right to development). 16 votes
were taken and 98 resolutions adopted.
322
C Sanctions
In a handful of cases between 1970 and 1993, the Twelve were able to agree that a
violation of human rights was so serious that it called for a response going beyond the
submission of a dmarche or condemnation at the United Nations. However, the
Twelve agreed on sanctions only in response to a handful of atypical cases; the vast
majority of human rights abuses, no matter how egregious, attracted no more than
criticism.
The imposition of martial law in Poland in December 1981 found the Member
States at odds over the appropriate response. While the German government in
particular was eager to preserve as far as possible the gains of dtente, the Twelve came
under pressure from the United States to support the sanctions it had implemented
against the Soviet Union. EPC sought to coordinate a response which would
adequately answer the Draconian suspension of civil liberties, while not irreparably
damaging relations with the USSR. Following an EPC statement condemning the
violation of the most elementary human rights and noting that the Member States
would examine their commercial relations with the Soviet Union in the light of events
in Poland,60 the Council announced that all Member States, except Greece, were in
favour of a reduction in the Communitys imports from the Soviet Union. The Council
subsequently adopted Regulation 596/82 which reduced import quotas for 60 types
of Soviet products.61 This was the first occasion on which a consensus reached in EPC
on the need for sanctions had been implemented by the use of a Community
instrument, and formed a precedent which was followed when implementing
sanctions against South Africa, Serbia and Haiti.
South Africa represented an especially difficult problem for EPC, as opinion on the
best course to adopt was sharply divided between the moralists, Denmark, Ireland
and the Netherlands, and the realists, Germany, Portugal and the United Kingdom,
which had substantial commercial links with South Africa.62 Although these
disagreements did not prevent the formation of, and adherence to, a consensus
position,63 the need to achieve compromise ensured that sanctions were minimal. The
imposition of a state of emergency in 1985 led the Member States to agree to an arms
embargo, the cessation of military cooperation, the recall of military attachs, the
discouragement of cultural, scientific and sporting contacts and a ban on the export of
oil and nuclear equipment.64 Although the Commission had proposed that the
economic measures should be implemented using Community instruments, opposition from Denmark, Germany and the United Kingdom ensured that the measures
were put into effect at the national level. The reimposition of the state of emergency in
60
61
62
63
64
323
June 1986 led to a softening of British opposition to sanctions and in September 1986
EPC agreed to ban new investment in South Africa and the import of Krugerrands,
iron and steel from South Africa.65
The next human rights violation to force itself onto the EPC agenda was the 1989
Tiananmen Square massacre. The Madrid European Council announced sanctions
even more minimal than those imposed against South Africa: the Member States
would raise the issue of human rights in China in international forums; the Member
States would cease military cooperation and impose an arms embargo; bilateral
ministerial contacts would be halted; cultural, scientific and technical cooperation
programmes would be suspended; the Member States would prolong the visas of
Chinese students who did not want to return to China; and the Member States would
recommend postponement of new World Bank credits.66 As all these measures fell
within the competence of the Member States, there was no need for any Community
instrument. Even these symbolic sanctions did not last long; in October 1990, EPC
announced that the Member States had decided that relations with China would be
progressively normalised.67
Until 1990, the Member States had applied sanctions only in the face of human
rights abuses which were impossible to ignore. Sanctions were used when the
violations occurred in a European state in which the Member States had a keen
interest (Poland), where the violating state was an international pariah (South
Africa), and where the violations had attracted immense public attention and the
Member States would have brought universal opprobrium on themselves if they had
done nothing (China).68 The global political changes flowing from the end of the Cold
War raised hopes that the developed countries might begin to promote human rights
more assertively in their foreign relations and in the early 1990s EPC did show signs of
increased willingness to adopt sanctions in response to human rights violations. The
refusal of the State Law and Order Council (SLORC) in Burma to give effect to the
results of the May 1990 general election and the house arrest of Aung San Suu Kyi led
the Member States to agree on the imposition of an arms embargo.69 EPC reacted to
the suspension in December 1990 of the Zairian National Conference by President
Mobutu by announcing that the Community and Member States had decided to
suspend technical and economic assistance to Zaire; following the appointment of a
Prime Minister by Presidential decree in March 1993, EPC announced the introduction of an arms embargo and restrictions on the grant of visas to Zairian nationals.70
After the cancellation of the Nigerian presidential elections of 12 June 1993, EPC
announced that the Member States had decided to suspend military cooperation with
65
66
67
68
69
70
324
Nigeria and to restrict the grant of visas to members of the armed forces.71 These
statements were notable for suggesting that the Member States were willing to react to
interruptions to the democratic process as well as to human rights violations.
Nevertheless, although the Member States made use of a new sanction, the denial of
visas, the sanctions remained very limited; there was no attempt to restrict trade or
investment.
325
on the basis of general guidelines from the European Council,73 Joint Actions which
shall commit the Member States in the positions they adopt and in the conduct of their
activity. Joint Actions were intended to enable the Member States to display greater
cohesion and political authority in their response to major foreign policy issues. The
effectiveness of these innovations, however, was undermined as each Member State
retained a veto concerning the adoption of Joint Actions and Common Positions.
A Diplomatic Activity
The introduction of the CFSP made little difference to the number of statements and
dmarches concerning human rights made by the Member States. The Annual
Memoranda to Parliament record that the Union published more than 80 declarations
and made 50 dmarches concerning human rights in 1994,74 69 declarations and
statements and 70 dmarches in 1995,75 and almost 40 declarations and nearly 80
dmarches in 1996.76
The European Parliament has continued to complain of the secrecy surrounding
many dmarches77 and to express concern about the vagueness of the Memoranda.78
The Memorandum for 1996 is characteristically uninformative. Some countries with
serious human rights problems, such as Algeria, Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia and Syria are
omitted from the Memorandum altogether. The Memorandum refers to the adoption
of political initiatives concerning Afghanistan, Burma, China and Indonesia but
reveals nothing about the effectiveness of these initiatives. Many other countries with
grave human rights problems, such as Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Sudan, are
mentioned only briefly.79
A recent review of the European Unions human rights policy suggested that an
Annual Report on human rights, based on reports from the Commissions overseas
delegations, should be drawn up to ensure that human rights formed a constant and
stable feature of the Unions foreign policy posture.80 In its Declaration on the 50th
anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in December 1998, the
European Council agreed to consider the possible publication of an annual human
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
The Lisbon European Council decided that among the objectives of joint actions were to be the
strengthening of democratic principles and institutions and respect for human and minority rights and
the promotion of good government. Bulletin 6/1992, at para. I.31.
CFSP Unit, General Secretariat of the Council, Memorandum to the European Parliament on the activities
of the European Union in the field of human rights, DOC 5644/2/94, at para. 19.
CFSP Unit, General Secretariat of the Council, Annual memorandum to the European Parliament on the
activities of the European Union in the field of Human Rights 1995, DOC 5468/96, at 5.
CFSP Unit, General Secretariat of the Council, Annual Memorandum on the activities of the European
Union in the field of human rights 1996, DOC 11446/97, at 5.
European Parliament (Committee on Foreign Affairs), Report on the role of the European Union in the
world: Implementation of the Common Foreign and Security Policy in 1997 (Rapporteur: T. Spencer),
DOC A4169/98, 30 April 1998.
OJ C 126/1995; OJ C 20/1996.
For further analysis, see van der Klaauw, European Union: Council Memorandum of EU Activities in the
Field of Human Rights during 1996, 16 (1998) NQHR 230.
Alston and Weiler, An Ever Closer Union in Need of a Human Rights Policy, 9 EJIL (1998) 658, at
707.
326
rights report and the following month the Council invited COREPER to work out the
general structure of the report.81 Although much will depend on the form the report
takes, it seems to represent a significant commitment by the Member States, as it is
likely both to generate annual friction with the countries criticized and to draw public
attention in Europe to human rights abuses, so stimulating greater public pressure for
action.
B International Organizations
Following the end of the Cold War, the Eastern European states in the OSCE have in
general been eager to follow the EU Member States lead on issues of human rights and
democracy, not least because they must embrace the Unions norms in these areas in
order to accede to the Union. The Member States have continued to participate
actively in the OSCE by, for example, presenting joint papers on all agenda items at
review meetings and adopting a Joint Action to provide election monitors for
operations in Bosnia carried out under the aegis of OSCE.82 Perhaps the most notable
success for the Member States, however, has been to set in motion the negotiations
which led to the adoption of the 1995 Pact on Stability under the auspices of the OSCE,
whereby the Central and Eastern European states undertook to settle by negotiation
and agreement questions concerning, inter alia, trans-border cooperation, the rights
of ethnic minorities and environmental problems and accepted OSCE monitoring of
their obligations.83
Although some diplomats at the United Nations have noted improved coordination
between the Member States in recent years, split votes have continued to occur.84 In
the Third Committee, the Member States split their votes on four resolutions in
1994,85 on three resolutions in 1995,86 on one resolution in 199687 and on two in
1997.88 In the Commission on Human Rights, the Member States split their votes on
four resolutions in 1994,89 on two resolutions in 199590 and achieved unanimity in
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
CFSP Statement 14128/98 10 December 1998; EIS European Report No 2368, 6 March 1999, Section
V, at 5.
Decision 94/406/CFSP, OJ L 168/1996.
Decision 93/728/CFSP, OJ L 339/1993. For a full analysis of the Stability Pact, see Ueta, The Stability
Pact: From the Balladur Initiative to the EU Joint Action, in M. Holland (ed.), Common Foreign and
Security Policy: The Record and Reforms (1997) 92.
Crook, The 51st Session of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, 90 AJIL (1996) 126, at
137.
Resolutions 49/150 (mercenaries), 49/151 (self-determination), 49/182 (freedom of travel and family
reunification) and 49/182 (Kosovo). 12 votes were taken and 70 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 50/138 (mercenaries), 50/190 (Kosovo) and 50/193 (Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia). 12 votes
were taken and 68 resolutions adopted.
Resolution 51/83 (mercenaries). 12 votes were taken and 62 resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 52/112 (mercenaries) and 52/136 (right to development). 16 votes were taken and 68
resolutions adopted.
Resolutions 1994/11 (economic adjustment policies), 1994/21 (right to development), 1994/48 (Asia
and the Pacific) and 1994/75 (Bosnia and Herzegovina). 19 votes were taken and 112 resolutions
adopted.
Resolutions 1995/62 (freedom of travel and family reunification) and 1995/78 (Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child). 19 votes were taken and 93 resolutions adopted.
327
199691 for the first time before splitting their votes on three resolutions in both 199792
and 1998.93 While the Member States adhered to Common Positions in which they
had agreed on UN voting, they clearly did not interpret Article J.1(4) as restricting
their voting behaviour on issues where the Council had not adopted a Common
Position.94 For example, even though the Council had issued a series of statements
defining its position on human rights violations in Yugoslavia, the Member States split
their votes three times at the United Nations. In the Third Committee, Greece, which
has persistently been more sympathetic to the Serbian position than the other
Member States, abstained on two resolutions strongly condemnatory of Serbian
atrocities, while the other 14 voted in favour.95
It is policy towards China which has proved, in the words of Chris Patten, the most
embarrassing indication of the gulf between European rhetoric and reality.96 In
response to the Tiananmen Square massacre, in 1990 the Member States first
co-sponsored a resolution before the Human Rights Commission condemning Chinas
human rights record and subsequently co-sponsored similar resolutions each year.
These resolutions represented a notable success for EPC and the CFSP, as alone each
Member State might have hesitated to sponsor a critical resolution for fear of
commercial retaliation from one of Europes most important export markets. In 1997,
however, France, Germany, Italy and Spain withdrew their backing for the
resolution;97 the alteration in French policy, which was seen as crucial, was attributed
to French reluctance to upset China shortly before President Chirac paid a state visit to
Beijing during which he was to sign an export contract for Airbus.98 As the Dutch
Presidency noted, the French decision put the essence of the human rights policy of
the European Union ... at stake.99 Denmark, with the support of nine Member States,
subsequently sponsored the resolution; China retaliated by cancelling a visit by Zhu
Rongji, the Vice-Premier, to Denmark and some of its co-sponsors.100 In February
1998 the Member States put an end to discussion by agreeing not to sponsor
Resolutions on China before future sessions of the Human Rights Commission.101
In a Communication on relations with China in early 1998, the European
Commission argued that resumption of dialogue with China would be more
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
328
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
European Commission, Building a Comprehensive Partnership with China, 25 March 1998 COM (1998)
181.
Bulletin 6/1998, at para. 1.4.132.
Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Annual Report on Human Rights 1998, at 40.
OJ C 339/1997.
EIS European Report No. 2327, 22 June 1998, at V.1.
US Department of State, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1998 China, 26 February 1999.
EIS European Report, No. 2371, 6 January 1999, Section V, at 6.
329
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
Winn, The Proof of the Pudding is in the Eating: The EU Joint Action as an Effective Foreign Policy
Instrument?, 13 International Relations (1997) 19.
Decision 93/604/CFSP OJ L 286/1993.
Decision 93/678/CFSP OJ L 316/1993.
Decision 94/276/CFSP OJ L; Decision 95/205/CFSP OJ L 130/95.
Decision 98/735/CFSP OJ L 354/98.
In other cases, such as in Cambodia and Togo during 1998, the Union has provided substantial electoral
support and monitoring without adopting a Joint Action. European Commission, General Report on the
Activities of the European Union 1998, at paras 34 and 904.
Holland, The Joint Action on South Africa: A Successful Experiment?, in Holland, supra note 83, at 174.
Statement of the Presidency to the European Parliament during the debate on Union human rights
policy. 10 European Foreign Policy Bulletin (1994) 143.
Decision 95/515/CFSP OJ L 298/1995; Decision 95/544/CFSP OJ L 309/1995.
OJ C 323/1995.
330
Agip with substantial investments in the Nigerian oil industry, refused to go beyond
these limited sanctions.
During the early 1990s, Belgium and France, the two Member States with the
closest ties with Rwanda, enjoyed significant potential leverage in view of the very
substantial and increasing levels of economic assistance which they provided.
However, although France had declared that its economic aid to Africa was
conditional upon the observation of human rights, in practice French policy towards
Rwanda was driven not by concern for human rights but by a determination to fight
Anglo-Saxon encroachment, in the shape of Tutsi rebels supported by Uganda, on its
traditional sphere of influence in Africa.119 Neither Belgium nor France reduced
development aid in response to increasingly severe human rights violations in
Rwanda, so sending a clear message to the Habyarimana government that support
would continue regardless of human rights abuses.120 France, moreover, continued to
supply and service much of the materiel used by the Rwandan army, even after the
imposition of the United Nations arms embargo in May 1994.121 Frances determination to pursue its own agenda in the Great Lakes region prevented the Union from
reacting promptly to the genocide in 1994 and limited the Unions response to
declarations and belated gestures of concern. The Council was unable to adopt a
Common Position until after the main period of genocide had finished in October
1994, which belatedly called for the provision of humanitarian aid, the deployment of
human rights observers and UN forces and the establishment of an international war
crimes tribunal.122 Although the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights called for
governments to provide $2.1 million to allow the deployment of 147 human rights
observers in Rwanda in August 1994, the Union did not dispatch human rights
observers until March 1995.123 Moreover, although the Union was in a position on
the adoption of the Common Position to offer Rwanda a credit of almost $200 million
for urgent reconstruction, French hostility to the Bizimungu government led France
to veto this until November.124 The Unions failure to act more quickly and forcefully
was especially tragic as, given Rwandas dependence on economic aid, the Unions
influence was huge; as Gerard Prunier has noted, the Habyarimana regime would
not have gone off the deep end if they had been sure that total international isolation
would result. Thus France was the unwitting catalyst of ultimate Rwandese descent
into the bloodbath.125
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
G. Prunier, The Rwanda Crisis: History of a Genocide 19591994 (1995), at 104106; Huliaras, The
Anglo-Saxon Conspiracy: French Perceptions of the Great Lakes Crisis, 36 Journal of Modern African
Studies (1998) 593.
Joint Evaluation of Emergency Assistance to Rwanda, The International Response to Conflict and Genocide:
Lessons from the Rwanda Experience Historical Perspective, vol. 1 (1996), at 39; Idem, Early Warning and
Conflict Management, vol. 2 (1996), at 3133.
Human Rights Watch Arms Project, Arming Rwanda; The Arms Trade and Human Rights Abuses in the
Rwandan War (1994); Idem, Rwanda/Zaire Rearming with Impunity (1995).
Common Position 94/697/CFSP OJ L 283/1994.
Prunier, supra note 119, at 343; EIS European Report No. 2023, 10 March 1995.
Ibid, at 336.
Ibid, at 352.
331
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
332
135
136
137
138
E.g., a 1993 World Bank Report attributed rapid economic growth in East Asia to a politically stable
environment brought about by authoritarian but competent governments committed to a developmentalist strategy. The East Asian Miracle Economic Growth and Public Policy (1993).
For discussion of the role of Asian values in East Asias international relations, see J. T. H. Tang, Human
Rights and International Relations in the Asia-Pacific Region (1995); Kausikan, Governance that Works, 8
Journal of Democracy (1997) 24; Palmujoki, EU-ASEAN Relations: Reconciling Two Different Agendas
19 Contemporary Southeast Asia (1997) 269.
E.g., in 1993, Chancellor Helmut Kohl embarked on the first of a series of annual tours of Asian capitals
intended to increase trade. A 1995 German Foreign Ministry Report noted that if Germany could attain
the level of foreign investment in Asia which Japan had in Europe, 400,000 jobs would be created in
Germany. Federal Foreign Office, The Federal Governments Concept on Asia (1995). In 1994, President
Chirac called for French exporters to try to increase Frances market share of exports to Asia from 2% to
6%. Quoted in Camroux and Lechervy, Close Encounter of a Third Kind? The Inaugral Asia-Europe
Meeting of March 1996, 9 Pacific Review (1996) 442.
de Vasconcelos, Portugal: Pressing for an Open Europe, in C. Hill, The Actors in Europes Foreign Policy
(1996) 268.
Bulletin 11/1991, at para. 1.4.10; Bulletin 12/1991, para. 1.4.4; Bulletin 1/2/1992, at para. 1.5.18.
333
while criticizing the armed forces, the statements largely accepted the findings of the
Indonesian commission of inquiry.139 In July 1992, the Council discussed negotiating
a new cooperation agreement with ASEAN to replace the existing 1980 agreement140
between the Community and ASEAN but Portugal vetoed the start of negotiations
because of its concern over East Timor.141 In an effort to persuade Portugal to
withdraw its veto, in June 1996 the Council adopted a Common Position on East
Timor, which expressed support for the talks taking place under the aegis of the UN
Secretary-General and called upon the Indonesian government to adopt effective
measures leading to a significant improvement in the human rights situation in East
Timor.142 Even such muted criticism drew a sharp reaction, with the Indonesian
Foreign Minister denouncing the Common Position as tantamount to a declaration of
war,143 and led ASEAN to consider whether the Union should continue to participate
in the ASEAN Regional Forum.144
Asian foreign ministers made clear before the first Asia-Europe summit meeting
(ASEM) in March 1996 that sensitive, controversial and irrelevant issues should be
avoided and the Indonesian Foreign Minister sought to extract a guarantee that the
issue of East Timor would not be raised.145 Although human rights issues were
discussed in bilateral meetings between heads of government at the summit, the
Chairmans Statement noted blandly that while the parties affirmed their strong
commitment to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, political dialogue
between the two regions would take place in conformity with the norm of
non-intervention in the internal affairs of the partners.
Following the death in police custody of its honorary consul in Rangoon in June
1996, Denmark pressed for the symbolic sanctions already implemented against
Burma by EPC to be strengthened. The Unions response was minimal; in October
1996, the Council adopted a Common Position which condemned continuing human
rights abuses in Burma, confirmed the existing sanctions, introduced a ban on entry
visas for senior members of the SLORC and the military and suspended high-level
bilateral government contacts with Burma.146 Despite this condemnation of the
SLORC, several Member States continued vigorously to promote trade with Burma.147
The Unions reaction to the admission of Burma to ASEAN in July 1997 was muted;
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
334
the Council made no criticism of the decision, although it did note that the human
rights situation in Burma precluded Burmas accession to the EC-ASEAN Cooperation
Agreement.148 The Member States have subsequently encountered some difficulty in
maintaining their dialogue with ASEAN while refusing to deal with Burma. A
specialist ASEAN-EU cooperation conference in November 1997 was postponed
because the Union refused to attend if Burma was allowed to participate.149 The Union
also refused to invite Burma to the second ASEM summit in April 1998, arguing that
membership of ASEAN did not automatically entitle a state to participate in ASEM.
Although this decision drew sharp criticism from Malaysia,150 it did not make good its
threat to boycott the meeting. The quid pro quo for accepting Burmas exclusion
appears to have been the complete exclusion of human rights issues from the summit
itself; the Chairmans closing statement made no reference whatever to civil and
political rights.151 The Unions desire to avoid conflict with ASEAN countries was
further demonstrated by the British Presidencys vigorous lobbying at the 1998 UN
Human Rights Commission against the adoption of a strong resolution on East
Timor.152
In May 1998, the Council adopted a Common Position which provided that the
Union would support the ongoing establishment of democracy in Africa by
encouraging: respect for civil and political and social, economic and cultural human
rights; respect for basic democratic principles, including the right to choose leaders in
free elections, the separation of powers and freedom of expression, association and
political organization; the rule of law, including a legislative and judicial system
giving full effect to human rights and a fair, accessible and independent judicial
system; and good governance, including the transparent and accountable management of a countrys resources.153 The Union would increase support for African
countries where positive changes had occurred and consider appropriate responses
to negative changes. The Common Position thus repeated the stance set out in the
human rights, democracy and development Resolution adopted by the Council in
1991,154 which has since formed the basis for Community development policy.155 The
Common Position is more modest than the 1991 Resolution, which made reductions
in military expenditure a condition of further Community aid156 and which applied to
all developing countries; it appears that the Common Position has been limited to
Africa to avoid further irritating China and the ASEAN states. The Common Position
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
335
not only substantially expands the brief reference to human rights and democracy in
Article J.1(2) TEU, but shall also serve as a framework for the actions of the Member
States. It is notable that seven years elapsed before the Member States accepted that
the principles contained in the 1991 Resolution should govern CFSP policy and their
bilateral relations with the African states as well as Community development policy.
The reason for this delay may be found in alterations in French policy. At the 1990 La
Baule Franco-African summit, President Mitterand had declared that, like most other
donors, France would link its bilateral aid to democratic reforms and human rights.157
However, when it became apparent that democratic reform might weaken Frances
hold over its African chasse gardee, the initial enthusiasm for reform was quickly
abandoned; as Bernard Debre, French Minister for Development Co-operation noted in
1994 Il faut savoir que democratisation egale toujours fragilisation.158 French policy
towards Africa during the 1990s remained driven by determination to preserve
Frances close links with the francophone states, regardless of their attitudes to
human rights and democracy.159 France was naturally reluctant to agree to a
Common Position requiring its foreign policy to conform to criteria which it so
evidently did not meet. However, the failure of French policy in Rwanda and Zaire, the
evident public support in Africa for reform which the United States has skilfully if
selectively supported and the election of the Jospin government in May 1997
produced a change in policy; France now accepts that it can no longer stand alone
against the Western consensus in favour of democratic reform in Africa.160 As the
British Presidency noted, the Common Position represented an agreement among the
former colonial powers finally to put behind them rivalry in Africa and to agree
instead to advance their common interests there.161
3 Conclusion
Although human rights are supposed to lie at the heart of the CFSP, in practice the
Unions response to grave violations of human rights in Rwanda, Zaire, Nigeria,
Burma and East Timor has been minimal and ineffectual. The Unions human rights
157
158
159
160
161
336
163
164
See generally Donnelly, Human Rights: A New Standard of Civilization, 74 International Affairs (1998)
1.
Fouwels, The European Unions Common Foreign and Security Policy and Human Rights, 15 NQHR
(1997) 291, at 310.
OJ C 126/1995.
337
165
166
167
168
Asian Values Revisited, The Economist, 25 July 1998, at 25; Emmerson, Americanizing Asia?, 77
Foreign Affairs (1998) 47.
Verbatim report of Proceedings in the European Parliament for 27 May, supra note156.
Report of the Commission of Inquiry appointed under Article 26 of the Constitution of the ILO to examine
the observation by Myanmar of the Forced Labour Convention, Forced Labour in Myanmar (Burma)
Geneva, 2 July 1998.
Decision 98/612/CFSP, OJ L 291/1998; Bulletin 10/1998, at paras 1.3.111.3.12. The meeting of the
Joint Co-operation Committee has not, however, taken place because of a dispute over seating
arrangements; the Union wants Burma to be identified differently from the other ASEAN members, while
ASEAN insists that all members must be identified in the same way. EIS European Report, No. 2387, 3
March 1999, Section V, at 5.